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Read. Pray. Write.
Read. Pray. Write.
10 episodes
3 weeks ago
Pray-as-you-go with episodes that bring together music, an inspiring text, time for meditation, brief interviews with faith-filled creatives who share how sacred reading can provide soul food for us all, and writing prompts on the www.readpraywrite.com website for further contemplation.
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Christianity
Religion & Spirituality,
Health & Fitness,
Mental Health
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All content for Read. Pray. Write. is the property of Read. Pray. Write. and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Pray-as-you-go with episodes that bring together music, an inspiring text, time for meditation, brief interviews with faith-filled creatives who share how sacred reading can provide soul food for us all, and writing prompts on the www.readpraywrite.com website for further contemplation.
Show more...
Christianity
Religion & Spirituality,
Health & Fitness,
Mental Health
Episodes (10/10)
Read. Pray. Write.
Meditation: Let the Bible Love You








“Read the Bible to seek to know divine love, and to know the divine lover better. Is there any other reason, ultimately, to read it?” Read the Bible Like a Mystic, by Carl McColman

Listen to a guided meditation with a reading by author Carl McColman that encourages us to approach Scripture differently, as the saints and mystics did: as part of a response to divine love, as consent to the Spirit’s presence and action in our lives.
 








































About the Author & Text​











Returning guest Carl McColman is a blogger, spiritual teacher, and author of several books about faith and mysticism. He has been a practitioner of Christian contemplative prayer for over 35 years, a life-professed lay associate of the Trappist Monastery near where he lives just outside of Atlanta, Georgia. He is also a commissioned Centering Prayer presenter, a spiritual director, and a retreat leader. You can find Carl online at www.carlmccolman.com.
Watch: Host Jean Kelly and McColman discuss how to lead a more contemplative life  through mysticism and Scripture, taped at the Wild Goose Festival in 2025.






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3 weeks ago

Read. Pray. Write.
Interview: A Mystical Journey Through Scripture Unveils Divine Love







https://youtu.be/5KhDXaJ_8XAReturning guest and mysticism expert Carl McColman encourages seekers of all denominations to approach Scripture differently, as the saints and mystics did: responding to divine love,  consenting to the Spirit’s presence, and expressing compassion and kindness through service and social action.More from this CreativeComing Soon: Audio guided meditation with reading from Read The Bible like a MysticClick cover to purchase directly from publisher.AboutCarl McColman is a blogger, speaker, and author of several books about faith and mysticism. He has been a practitioner of Christian contemplative prayer for over 35 years, a life-professed lay associate of the Trappist Monastery near where he lives just outside of Atlanta, Georgia. He is also a commissioned Centering Prayer presenter, a spiritual director, and a retreat leader. You can find Carl online at www.carlmccolman.com






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4 weeks ago
20 minutes 27 seconds

Read. Pray. Write.
Interview: How creativity leads us closer to the Divine.













A life of creativity is an expression of our role of co-creators with God says musical and visual artist Jessica Gerhardt. Her spiritual journey and influences have taught that “we all have an invitation to lean into creativity as people who are made in God’s image.” She also discusses with host Jean Kelly how meditation like audio divina helps us to also take social action with “spiritual and emotional sobriety” that makes our involvement sustainable.











More from this Creative



















“Audio divina” meditation















More songs by this artist















Audio guided meditation































Click album to stream and listen.







About







Jessica Gerhardt is a queer, Catholic LA-native singer-songwriter with a distinct spiritual bent. Having grown up in a Catholic-Jewish mixed-faith family, Jessica was shaped by inclusive notions of religion. She claims this spiritual identity in her debut LP, Alight Beyond the Sea, which centers around Psalm 139 and God’s presence in sorrow and joy, in darkness and light, and in seeking to live authentically. Jessica is also a sponsored Lanikai Ukuleles artist, co-founder of the arts collective Parnassus & Co, founder of the house-concert series Friday at The Fox Den, writes on occasion for National Catholic Reporter, sells her art via her Etsy shop Work of Human Hands, and is a high school theology teacher. 


















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5 months ago
8 minutes 49 seconds

Read. Pray. Write.
Discover Divine Listening: Meditation Through Music








“It’s all yours. Everything is yours. It’s always been yours, and it always will be.
Take it from me, I return it to you. Just dwell in me and I’ll dwell in you.” Suscipe, by Jessica Gerhardt












Music can be a starting point for meditation and prayer, something called Divine Listening or “audio divina.Listen as host Jean Kelly and musical artist Jessica Gerhardt lead you toward rest in the Divine via guided meditation, melody, lyrics, silence, and pause, featuring an original composition and live performance inspired by a prayer of surrender written by St. Ignatius of Loyola.















Stream the album by clicking on the cover above.







About the Author & Text







L.A.-based singer-songwriter Jessica Gerhardt grew up in a Catholic-Jewish mixed-faith family, so was shaped by inclusive notions of religion. This bears out in the spiritual identity she claims in Alight Beyond the Sea, which centers around Psalm 139 and God’s presence in sorrow and joy, in darkness and light, and in seeking to live authentically. In addition to composing all ten songs on the record, she hand-embroidered the cover art for each, making this album a work of art both visually and audibly.


















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6 months ago
8 minutes 49 seconds

Read. Pray. Write.
Interview: How Meditation Practice Leads to Social Action













“I can’t meditate.” “I don’t have time for deeper spirituality because I’m too busy fighting political division and injustice.” Those are common refrains, but in this discussion of meditation, spiritual reading, and contemplation as practiced in both Christianity and Sikhism, best-selling author Simran Jeet Singh and host Jean Kelly debunk common myths about meditation. They conclude that the connectedness to God and all creation discovered in deep prayer can change both us as individuals and our world. Singh says “Being religious is more than being spiritual; it is being political.”











More from this Creative



















Author-read excerpt as an audio guided meditation.































Click to purchase from an independent book seller.







About







South-Texas native Simran Jeet Singh is a professor of history at the historic Union Theological Seminary and national bestselling author of The Light We Give: How Sikh Wisdom Can Transform Your Life  and senior advisor for the Aspen Institute’s Religion and Society Program. He hosts Wisdom & Practice, a new podcast on PRX.


















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6 months ago
25 minutes 17 seconds

Read. Pray. Write.
Share the Light: A Meditation on the Power of Remembrance







“Adopting love and oneness as mindfulness practices helped transform me …[They] cultivated in me a feeling of connection and joy that extends beyond personal relationships.” Simran Jeet Singh 











Approaches to meditation in both Eastern and Western faith traditions provide the same fruits: ending division, creating personal and social transformation, and connecting us to God and each other with deeper love.















Click to purchase from an independent book seller.







About the Author & Text







South-Texas native Simran Jeet Singh is a professor of history at the historic Union Theological Seminary and national bestselling author of The Light We Give: How Sikh Wisdom Can Transform Your Life  and senior advisor for the Aspen Institute’s Religion and Society Program. He hosts Wisdom & Practice, a new podcast on PRX.


















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7 months ago
8 minutes 27 seconds

Read. Pray. Write.
Carrying the Cross, Afire in Christ’s Gaze








“His eyes. His eyes as steady as a fisher’s netpulled me to him. Again I fell and never broke the stare.” Fr. Joseph A. Brown “Luke”












Imagining ourselves in scriptural texts is one way to “respond” in lectio divina. This poem by Fr. Joseph A. Brown, SJ, arose from his Ignatian contemplation practice, a form of “imaginative” prayer, in response the story of Simon of Cyrene saying “yes” to carrying the cross of Jesus. When you listen, consider your own response to Luke 23:26-29. 
Do the eyes of Christ on the road to Calvary draw you nearer?
















Explore this and other poems in Presence:  A Journal of Catholic Poetry.







About the Author & Text







Joseph A. Brown, S. J., Ph.D. a native of East St. Louis, Illinois, is a Catholic priest andmember of the Society of Jesus. He is a professor at Southern Illinois University Carbondale and Director of the School of Africana and Multicultural Studies. He has published several poetry collections and serves on the board of Presence journal. He also composes the blog, “The Sankofa Muse.


















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7 months ago
9 minutes 9 seconds

Read. Pray. Write.
St. Brigid, Buddah, and Lao Tzu Walk into a Podcast













Host Jean P. Kelly and author Kenneth R. McIntosh discuss how understanding both Celtic & Eastern spirituality can liberate the Christian imagination.











More from this Creative



















Audio guided meditation of author-read excerpt































 







About







Kenneth McIntosh’s commitment to live the compassion of Christ has inspired three decades of service as pastor for six different churches in five different denominations, where he worked to heal the world’s wounds while cultivating a deeper connection with the Divine. He is a pastor of the United Church of Christ and author of dozens of books, many inspired by travel in Celtic countries.

















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8 months ago
15 minutes 45 seconds

Read. Pray. Write.
Navigate Rapids of Life with both Celtic & Taoist Guides







“Some of us, who are focused on the flow of the Tao, are like skilled river-runners in kayaks, skimming along atop the white-water, flowing with the current. …[We] only need to make slight efforts to propel forward.” Kenneth R. McIntosh











The intersection of teachings in Celtic Christianity and Eastern faiths offers strength of both the oak (Celtic spirituality) and the lotus (Eastern wisdom), writes Kenneth McIntosh in his new book, Oak & Lotus: Celtic Christian Spirituality in the Light of Eastern Wisdom. “And I understand my Christian faith better in the light of both Asian and Celtic understanding.”















Click to buy.







About the Author & Text







Kenneth McIntosh’s commitment to live the compassion of Christ has inspired three decades of service as pastor for six different churches in five different denominations, where he worked to heal the world’s wounds while cultivating a deeper connection with the Divine.  He is a pastor of the United Church of Christ.He is the author of dozens of books, many inspired by his travel in Celtic countries.


















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8 months ago
9 minutes 57 seconds

Read. Pray. Write.
Christ’s suffering inspires our compassion







“I saw too the reverence that everyone must have for a sinner; instead of condoning his sin, which is in reality his utmost sorrow, one must comfort Christ who is suffering in him..” Caryll Houselander











The ability to see others with compassion must be cultivated, practiced, and intentional, says a twentieth-century mystic who became known for her capacity to hold and cherish the suffering of others.















 







About the Author & Text







Caryll Houselander was a twentieth-century writer and artist who lived most of her life in London. She experienced her first mystical vision as a child and then again in a commuter train, both documented in the first of her two spiritual memoirs.  Once dubbed a “DivineEccentric,”  Houselander endured much personal suffering, but because she linked her trials with Christ’s passion, she found divinity in everyone amid the ordinariness of daily life. 


















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8 months ago
8 minutes 7 seconds

Read. Pray. Write.
Pray-as-you-go with episodes that bring together music, an inspiring text, time for meditation, brief interviews with faith-filled creatives who share how sacred reading can provide soul food for us all, and writing prompts on the www.readpraywrite.com website for further contemplation.